Color saturation (the amount of color)
Color control is common on almost all types of displays. Color control usually adjusts the total amount of color present in an image. This is also referred to as an image's color saturation. Saturation of color that indicates the proportion of white that has a certain color. The saturated colors are vivid and intense, while the mix are a little saturated with white, so they appear apastelados. In the absence of saturation the color hue is a shade of grey. A highly saturated hue has a vivid, intense color, while a less saturated hue appears more muted and grey.
The 3D color management offers adjustments to red, green, blue, cyan, magenta, and yellow independently for hue, saturation, and value. In addition, the Golden Ratio Wheel incorporated inside the projectors to balance color saturation and maximize color accuracy with the original input signal. Traditionally LCD's strengths are in colour saturation and accuracy, efficiency and image sharpness. The better saturation gives a richer more vibrant look to the picture and colours are rendered more accurately. The better light efficiency means that for a gives lamp wattage, LCD projectors will tend to give more light than dlp.
Image sharpness is near perfect with LCD (like the difference between and lcd monitor and a normal CRT monitor) whereas DLP has a slightly softer focus. LCD's weakness lies in two area's. The most commented on is the "screendoor" or "chicken wire" effect whereby you can see the pixel structure. In modern LCD video projectors this is much reduced by using higher resolutions and Micro Lens Arrays (MLA) which reduce pixel visibility. LCD's other weakness is contrast ratio which means it cannot usually match DLP for colour detail or black levels.
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